RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,331 results for "Type Ia supernova" — page 52 of 117
U_4_04 — Masks & Performance Traditions Worldwide
Masks are among the most universal cultural artifacts in human history, appearing independently on every inhabited continent and serving functions spanning religious ritual, ancestor communication, healing, social contro
U_4_14 — Iconography and Symbol Systems Across Cultures
Iconography — the systematic study of visual images, symbols, and their meanings — operates at the intersection of art history, religious studies, semiotics, and anthropology. Erwin Panofsky (1939, 1955) established the
U_4_10 — Puppetry and Automata
Puppetry — the animation of inanimate figures to tell stories — is among the oldest performing arts, predating written drama. Shadow puppets: wayang kulit (Indonesia — intricately carved leather puppets cast against a ba
U_4_03 — Cultural Evolution — Dual Inheritance and Cumulative Culture
Cultural evolution theory applies Darwinian principles — variation, selection, inheritance — to the transmission and transformation of cultural information (beliefs, technologies, norms, institutions). The dual inheritan
U_4_08 — Garden Design & Sacred Landscapes
Gardens have served throughout human history as constructed intersections of nature, art, religion, and power — from the Persian pairidaeza (walled garden, the etymological root of "paradise") to Japanese Zen rock garden
X_2_09 — Veterinary Medicine and Animal Healing History
Veterinary medicine — the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease in non-human animals — is one of the oldest branches of medical practice, arising alongside animal domestication (dogs ~15,000 BP; sheep/goats ~10
X_2_03 — Psychedelic Medicine: Clinical Evidence and Renaissance
The psychedelic renaissance — the resurgence of clinical research into psychedelic compounds after decades of prohibition — represents one of the most significant paradigm shifts in modern psychiatry. Psilocybin for trea
X_2_15 — Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Therapy
Regenerative medicine — defined as "the process of replacing, engineering, or regenerating human or animal cells, tissues, or organs to restore or establish normal function" — is among the most rapidly advancing frontier
X_2_10 — Bioelectromagnetic Medicine — Evidence and Controversy
Bioelectromagnetic medicine occupies an unusual position in the medical landscape — a field in which rigorously validated clinical applications (PEMF for bone healing, TMS for depression) coexist with a vast fringe of un
X_2_07 — Gut Microbiome and Digestive Health
The gut microbiome — the community of trillions of microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) inhabiting the human gastrointestinal tract — has emerged as one of the most transformative areas of biomedical resear
X_2_06 — Sleep Medicine and Chronobiology
Sleep medicine — the diagnosis and treatment of sleep disorders — and chronobiology — the study of biological rhythms — are relatively young scientific fields that address a phenomenon that occupies roughly one-third of
X_5_04 — Rehabilitation Medicine: Restoring Function After Injury and Illness
Rehabilitation medicine (also called physical medicine and rehabilitation — PM&R, or physiatry) is the medical specialty dedicated to restoring function, reducing disability, and improving quality of life for individuals
X_5_22 — Paracelsus & the Birth of Chemical Medicine
Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim (1493–1541), self-named Paracelsus, was a Swiss-German physician-alchemist who revolutionized European medicine by rejecting Galenic humoral theory and introducing
X_5_05 — Dermatology: The Science and Medicine of Skin
Dermatology is the medical specialty devoted to the diagnosis and management of diseases of the skin, hair, nails, and mucous membranes — the largest and most visible organ system. The skin serves as the body's primary b
X_5_17 — Gastroenterology and Microbiome Medicine
Gastroenterology — the study of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and its diseases — has been revolutionized by two discoveries: the role of Helicobacter pylori in peptic ulcer disease (Barry Marshall and Robin Warren, 198
X_5_19 — Drug Discovery: From Ethnobotany to Rational Design
Drug discovery is the process by which new therapeutic compounds are identified, developed, and brought to clinical use. The field has evolved through three major paradigms: (1) ethnobotanical/traditional knowledge — mos
X_5_16 — Telemedicine & Digital Health: Remote Care Revolution
Telemedicine — the delivery of healthcare services through telecommunications technology — has evolved from an experimental novelty (NASA's 1960s Space Technology Applied to Rural Papago Advanced Health Care project) int
X_5_13 — Bioethics of Human Experimentation: From Nuremberg to Informed Consent
The bioethics of human experimentation traces the long, often harrowing history of how humans have been used as subjects in medical and scientific research — and the ethical, legal, and institutional frameworks developed
X_5_09 — Pharmacology: The Science of Drugs and Their Actions
Pharmacology — the science of drugs — investigates how chemical substances interact with biological systems to produce therapeutic, toxic, or other effects. The discipline encompasses pharmacokinetics (what the body does
X_5_08 — One Health: Human, Animal, and Environmental Health Interconnected
One Health is an integrated, multidisciplinary approach that recognizes that the health of humans, animals, and ecosystems is fundamentally interconnected. The concept — formalized in the early 21st century but building
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